Potter's Orlando (1 Viewer)

chloe_o

New Member
Joined
Oct 12, 2002
Messages
3
Okay.
So.
Orlando.
What on earth is the deal? I mean, I understand (kind of) how it relates to post modernism, but the specifics, and particularly the techniques and themes, are a bit beyond me.

Can anyone help?
 

Coffee_Fan

Wait for the dark
Joined
Aug 7, 2002
Messages
83
Hey Chloe

Basically Orlando draws upon how women have been supressed and stuff like that throughout history

i can't believe your teacher hasn't given any of this to you!!

anyways, hmmmmmm i don't know where to start-these points will appear at random

orlando starts off as a man then has a sex change, pretty freaky, it kind of offers a contrasting view of men and women throughout history.

orlando as a man is actually played by a woman (tilda swinton)-this suggests to the audience that the man is not "genuine" so to speak

orlando as a woman sees her suppressed by the patriachy and she is described as "nothing"

orlandos intermittent glances at the camera blurrs the boundaries between audience and actor=postmodern

intertextuality with the three poets discussing who a female is

gender role reversal of orlando being sensually active with shalmerdine being passive

film is about androgeny

symbolises struggle of women

disrupts romance formula

supernatural theme=woman living for four hundred years

is this helping?

chloe i might need a bit more time to help you out ok??

you can e-mail me if you like: hot_ice92@hotmail.com

here's some starters anyway

Cheers, Josh
 

randy

New Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2002
Messages
17
Location
Upper North Shore (stuck up wanker!)
Better angle - try the blurring between genders, you know Orlando's quote after she undergoes the sex change "... same person". Person as being the identity, not male/female. Its by a feminist director, and has certain feminist themes, but is not essentially a feminist movie.
 

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